The Sea on Fire: Jean Barraqué - Biography & Music Analysis | Eastman Studies in Music Series | Perfect for Classical Music Scholars & Composers
The Sea on Fire: Jean Barraqué - Biography & Music Analysis | Eastman Studies in Music Series | Perfect for Classical Music Scholars & Composers

The Sea on Fire: Jean Barraqué - Biography & Music Analysis | Eastman Studies in Music Series | Perfect for Classical Music Scholars & Composers

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Product Description

The life and works of one of the most difficult yet rewarding composers of modern time.Jean Barraqué is increasingly being recognized as one of the great composers of the second half of the 20th century. Though he left only seven works, his voice in each of them is unmistakeable, and powerful. He had no doubt of hisresponsibility, as a creator, to take his listeners on challenging adventures that could not but leave them changed. After the collapse of morality he had witnessed as a child growing up during the Second World War, and having taken notice of so much disarray in the culture around him, he set himself to make music that would, out of chaos, speak. Three others were crucial to him. One was Pierre Boulez, who, three years older, provided him with keysto a new musical language -- a language more dramatic, driving and passionate than Boulez's. Another was Michel Foucault, to whom he was close personally for a while, and with whom he had a dialogue that was determinative for bothof them. Finally, in the writings of Hermann Broch-and especially in the novel The Death of Virgil-he found the myth he needed to realize musically. He played for high stakes, and he took risks with himself as well as in hisart. Intemperate and difficult, even with his closest friends, he died in 1973 at the age of forty-five. Paul Griffiths was chief music critic for the London Times (1982-92) and The New Yorker (1992-96) and since 1996 has written regularly for the New York Times. He has written books on Boulez, Cage, Messiaen, Ligeti, Davies, Bartók and Stravinsky, as well as several librettos, among them The Jewel Box (Mozart, 1991), Marco Polo (Tan Dun, 1996) and What Next? (Elliott Carter, 1999).

Customer Reviews

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This is , as far as I know, the only book in English about Barraque,and fortunately it's an excellent one. The author focusses on the music, with only as much comment on Barraque's private life as is needed for context. The lack of musical examples and photos might have been a result of financial constraints, but doesn't, for me, lessen the value of the book. There are detailed descriptions of the music - and, since Barraque didn't write much, there's room for Griffiths to go into considerable detail. I agree with the other reviewer about the sketchiness of the end of the book: it reads as if there were simply not much information available, and it ends, as did the composer's life, rather abruptly. If I were to make one small criticism, it would be that I'd like to know more about Broch's "Death of Vergil" and exactly why Barraque was so inspired by it. But one book can't contain everything. The only other criticism I have is of the price of the book, which can't be blamed on the author. If only there could be an affordable paperback, then Barraque's music might become better known. .